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PARTNERS
WEDNESDAY 31ST AUGUST 2011
NEWS
Car parks for St Peter’s,
with blessings from SACA
DES RYAN
COME next Sunday when Port Adelaide
and Melbourne play footy at Adelaide Oval,
the Reverend Mark Sibly will be lighting
a candle for Power in St Peter’s Cathedral
across the road.
Sibly, the Canon Pastor and Acting Dean of St
Peter’s, is a Port supporter and he thinks they
will need all the help they can get to pull off
an uncertain win.
“As far as the footy season and Port Power’s
status, I think I should be here praying rather
than over there. I might be best used here,”
he told Indaily in his cathedral office.
Port Adelaide needs to beat Melbourne to
avoid the wooden spoon, in an historic first
AFL game to be played on Adelaide Oval –
a taste of what’s to come when both Power
and the Adelaide Crows play there regularly
from 2014.
Car parking for St Peters will be a potential
problem on Sunday match... Read more
FLOATING in the Dead Sea for just 20 minutes may help
diabetics lower blood sugar levels, according to a study by
Israeli researchers.
The research was carried out by scientists from Ben Gurion
University and Soroka Medical Centre in... Read more
SA LIBERAL senator Sean Edwards,
already under investigation for an
alleged misuse of taxpayer-funded
chauffeur-driven cars, is facing a
new inquiry into the staffing of his
parliamentary offices. The Finance
Department has opened an inquiry
into the operation of Senator Edwards’s
commonwealth-funded offices, focusing
on the staff appointment of a vineyard
executive from the Clare Valley.
Read Michael Owens’ report in The
Australian.
THE head of the Foreign Affairs Department has warned
that Australian tourists should not expect the government to
automatically bail them out of trouble spots such as the north African
countries swept by revolutions this year.
Dennis Richardson, secretary of the department, said that the
government ‘’clearly has a responsibility to help individuals where
they are caught up in circumstances beyond their control’’, but that
principle could only be taken so far.
Read the rest of Dan Oakes report in The Age.
AAP
THE fate of the federal government’s
controversial Malaysian refugee
swap deal will be revealed by the
High Court this afternoon.
The court’s full bench will rule
on the policy’s lawfulness after a
challenge was brought on behalf of
asylum seekers facing deportation.
Refugee lawyers want the deal struck
down, arguing that Immigration
Minister Chris Bowen does not have
the power to send asylum seekers
to a country that has no legal
obligations to protect them.
They also argued that sending
unaccompanied minors to Malaysia
would breach Mr Bowen’s duty of
care as their legal guardian to act in
their best interests. Read more
Brightest scientific awards
INDAILY STAFF
STUDENT researchers hunting for new
medicines to treat and prevent illness
will be recognised next month at the
AusBiotech2011 Conference in Adelaide.
The AusBiotech-GSK Student Excellence
Awards are the country’s leading
competition for life science, biotechnology
and bio-engineering students.
Last year’s national winner was University
of Adelaide student Natasha Rogers for her
research into organ cell... Read more
Cancer-diabetes link in men
RESEARCH showing men with type 2 diabetes face a higher
risk of developing bowel cancer has sparked calls for more
regular screening checks for the potentially fatal disease.
An 11-year study of almost 1300 people with type 2 diabetes
found for the first time that both men and... Read more
Mark Sibly: ‘There’s no doubt that any regular footy here will be an issue
for the cathedral’
Natasha Rogers. Photo:
Adelaide University
SA senator staffing probe
Dennis Richardson
Chris Bowen
Sean Edwards
Help limits for stranded tourists
Refugee swap decision today
Dead Sea lowers blood sugar
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